Dutch tulip farm utilizes AI robot to slow the spread of plant disease
The robot uses its chest, hips and arms to handle objects -- just like we do. Theo works weekdays, weekends and nights and never complains about a sore spine despite performing hour upon hour of what, for a regular farm hand, would be backbreaking labor checking Dutch tulip fields for sick flowers. The boxy robot -- named after a retired employee at the WAM Pennings farm near the Dutch North Sea coast -- is a new high-tech weapon in the battle to root out disease from the bulb fields as they erupt into a riot of springtime color. On a windy spring morning, the robot trundled Tuesday along rows of yellow and red "goudstuk" tulips, checking each plant and, when necessary, killing diseased bulbs to prevent the spread of the tulip-breaking virus. The dead bulbs are removed from healthy ones in a sorting warehouse after they have been harvested.
Mar-19-2024, 16:38:29 GMT
- Country:
- Atlantic Ocean > North Sea (0.57)
- Europe > Netherlands
- Dutch North Sea (0.26)
- Industry:
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (0.33)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)